What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“Good Wool-Cards, by the dozen or single Pair, on very reasonable Terms.”
Readers who perused the June 3, 1776, edition of the Norwich Packet from the first page to the last page first encountered advertisements on the third page, starting with a notice from Ebenezer Loomis, “CARD-MAKER.” That Loomis’s advertisement appeared first was likely an accident rather than a deliberate decision made by the compositor or an arrangement made by the advertiser when he submitted the copy to the printing office. After all, Loomis’s notice did not have such a privileged place when it ran at the bottom of a column in the next issue of the Norwich Packet. The compositor placed it where it would fit.
No matter where his advertisement appeared in the newspaper, Loomis wanted readers to take note of the product he made and the service he performed in support of the American cause. Not every purveyor of goods and services used their occupation as a secondary headline to draw attention to their advertisements, but the “CARD-MAKER” did so and increased the visibility of his venture for readers who might not otherwise pause to read the paragraph that followed. Those who wanted to know more learned that Loomis “carries on the Business of Card-Making, in all its Branches … in Norwich-Town” when they read the short paragraph below the headlines that gave his name and occupation. Those “Wool-Cards” were small paddles with fine wire teeth used to separate and straighten the fibers, making wool easier to spin. They were essential tools for producing textiles, an endeavor that gained in economic and political significance due to nonimportation agreements adopted during the imperial crisis and the disruptions caused by the Revolutionary War. The eighth article of Continental Association, for instance, declared that “we will, in our several Stations, encourage Frugality, Economy, and Industry; and promote Agriculture, Arts, and the Manufactures of this Country, especially that of Wool.” That meant more than raising sheep. It also meant producing equipment, such as cards, spinning wheels, and looms, for processing wool and making textiles. Loomis did his part in that effort, making and selling “good Wool-Cards, by the dozen or single Pair, on very reasonable Terms.”























